"This book offers a sweeping and in-depth look at the global movement to curtail LGBTI rights, exploring both how this moral conservative movement functions-in terms of its key actors, claims, and venues of resistance-and how the LGBTI movement responds to it"--
Kristina Stoeckl Book order





- 2024
- 2022
The Moralist International
- 208 pages
- 8 hours of reading
The Moralist International is available from the publisher on an open-access basis.
- 2014
The Russian Orthodox Church and Human Rights
- 170 pages
- 6 hours of reading
Focusing on the 2008 publication by the Russian Orthodox Church, this examination traces the evolution of its stance on human dignity, freedom, and rights. It details the document's formation and analyzes its implications within the Church, nationally, and internationally. The study highlights a significant shift in the Church's perspective, moving from hostility towards individual human rights to promoting "traditional values," reflecting broader socio-political dynamics.
- 2012
Multiple Modernities and Postsecular Societies. Edited by Massimo Rosati and Kristina Stoeckl
- 200 pages
- 7 hours of reading
Exploring the diverse paths to modernity, this volume investigates the influence of religion across different cultural contexts, including Africa, the Middle East, Russia, and South America. It questions whether concepts like modernity, democracy, and secularism are universally applicable or specific to Western civilization. The analysis also delves into postsecularism and its connection to various forms of modern development, highlighting the complexity of these intertwined themes in shaping contemporary societies.
- 2008
Community after totalitarianism
The Russian Orthodox Intellectual Tradition and the Philosophical Discourse of Political Modernity
- 199 pages
- 7 hours of reading
Starting with a definition of political modernity from the perspective of its greatest trial - totalitarianism - this study asks the question how community is conceptualized in the contemporary Western philosophical discourse and in the Russian Orthodox intellectual tradition. Contemporary philosophical and theological approaches in Russia develop alternative perspectives on community and on the human subject. This study analyzes them historically and philosophically and compares them with liberal, postmodern and communitarian philosophies of community in the West. This thesis was supervised by Professor Dr. Peter Wagner at the European University Institute, Florence